Lesson 4 PDF
Lesson 4 PDF
Lesson 4 PDF
Classification of People
“No man is an island” goes the saying. Man can not
thrive without the presence of other men. There is a
natural tendency for man to live with others in a group,
to look for a companion or group of companions in order
to fulfill the need to belong and to experience some form
of comfort.
GROUP
A group serves many functions like giving an individual a
sense of identity as well as emotional intimacy.
It consists of two or more people who are distinct in the
following three ways:
a. Interact overtime
b. Have a sense of identity or belonging
c. Have norms that non-members don’t have.
For example: A class of students is a group who meet a
few times in a week for an entire semester and identify
themselves on the basis of what classes they are taking.
Students in a class must follow their professor’s class
and test schedule, as well as rules for behavior and
contribution in class.
AGGREGATE
An aggregate is a collection of people who happen to be
at the same place at the same time but who have no
other connection to one another.
An example: the people in a restaurant on a particular
evening are an example of an aggregate, not a group.
Those people do not know one another, and they will
likely never see again in the same place and the same
time.
CATEGORY
Third classification is category, which is a collection of
people who share a particular characteristic. They do not
necessarily interact with one another and have nothing
else in common.
Examples of categories may include people who have
green eyes, or people who were born in the Philippines,
or women who gave birth to twins
One important characteristic of a group is for group
members interact on a regular basis through
communication.
Social Group
Those who interact with one another and share similar
characteristics and a sense of unity is called a social
group. These groups may be families, companies, circles
of friends, fraternities and sororities and local religious
congregations
Nature of Social Group
➢ The group provides specific form as to the nature of
interaction in the society.
➢ Members should develop a structure where each member
assumes a specific status and adopts a particular role.
➢ Certain orderly procedures and values are agreed upon.
➢ The members of the group feel a sense of identity.
Sociocultural Evolution of Societies
Social Organization
Social organization
The type of collectivity established for the pursuit of
specific aims or goods
Characterized by a formal structure of rules, authority
relations, a division of labor and limited membership or
admission
Sociocultural Evolution of Societies
References
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Editions.Print
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www.differencebetween.net/miscellaneous/...anthropology-and-
sociology. Web. 06 June 2015.
Ferrante, J. (2014). Sociology a Global Perspective. 9th
edition. USA: cengage Learning. Print
Mauss, M. (2005). The Nature of Sociology Berghahn
Series.USA: Durkheim Press. Print
Sociology/Anthropology.
www.stolaf.edu/catalog/9697/socanthro.html. Web. 06 June
2015.